Effects of Volatile Anesthetics on N -methyl-d-aspartate Excitotoxicity in Primary Rat Neuronal–Glial Cultures

Author:

Kudo Masaya1,Aono Mitsuo1,Lee Yoonki1,Massey Gary2,Pearlstein Robert D.3,Warner David S.4

Affiliation:

1. Visiting Research Associate.

2. Research Assistant, Department of Anesthesiology.

3. Assistant Research Professor, Department of Surgery, Division of Neurosurgery.

4. Professor, Departments of Anesthesiology, Neurobiology, and Surgery.

Abstract

Background Volatile anesthetics are known to ameliorate experimental ischemic brain injury. A possible mechanism is inhibition of excitotoxic cascades induced by excessive glutamatergic stimulation. This study examined interactions between volatile anesthetics and excitotoxic stress. Methods Primary cortical neuronal-glial cultures were exposed to N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) or glutamate and isoflurane (0.1-3.3 mM), sevoflurane (0.1-2.9 mM), halothane (0.1-2.9 mM), or 10 microM (+)-5-methyl-10,11-dihydro-5H-dibenzo[a,d]-cyclohepten-5,10-imine hydrogen maleate (MK-801). Lactate dehydrogenase release was measured 24 h later. In other cultures, effects of volatile anesthetics on Ca++ uptake and mitochondrial membrane potential were determined in the presence or absence of NMDA (0-200 microM). Results Volatile anesthetics reduced excitotoxin induced lactate dehydrogenase release by up to 52% in a dose-dependent manner. At higher concentrations, this protection was reversed. When corrected for olive oil solubility, the three anesthetics offered equivalent protection. MK-801 provided near-complete protection. Ca++ uptake was proportionally reduced with increasing concentrations of anesthetic but did not account for reversal of protection at higher anesthetic concentrations. Given equivalent NMDA-induced Ca++ loads, cells treated with volatile anesthetic had greater lactate dehydrogenase release than those left untreated. At protective concentrations, volatile anesthetics partially inhibited NMDA-induced mitochondrial membrane depolarization. At higher concentrations, volatile anesthetics alone were sufficient to induce mitochondrial depolarization. Conclusions Volatile anesthetics offer similar protection against excitotoxicity, but this protection is substantially less than that provided by selective NMDA receptor antagonism. Peak effects of NMDA receptor antagonism were observed at volatile anesthetic concentrations substantially greater than those used clinically.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference42 articles.

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